Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, March 05, 1913, Page 11, Image 13

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    Jeff Has a Particular Way
r
wswu.i- Guess
CfcY 5TA.R.TSO.
HEAUX; OU&HY To
mavjg SYsR.vera
AT "DfvX bReA?
he Petty Tyrant Husband
is the Meanest Man
' on Earth
i,s 4. 15y fyoROTHV MX.
Hii'vfns discussed tlic meanest man In
thn '.world, nnd' the meanes( girl, and tho
meanest wife, let us: now turn our ul
tcntton to the meanest husband.
The'law, which Is made, by man and
voices- the mascu
line' viewpoint of
high" crime, and
tnlsdemcnnors, declares-
: that the
meanest husband Is'
th&moii who Is un
faithful to his wife,
ori'whb beats her,
orSwhp drinks too
nmc"h'"or who fullij
toisuport her.
It)' almost all of
thif. states, except
Now Vork, a wo
man'' van get u di
vorce from her
huLbu'rid for any
omsVfTjhese faults.
In New York, no
iratter how a man
utarves, or thrashes, or llltrcats his wlfo
ho; -Is n.ot considered to be really mean
enougjv to her to entitle her to a divorce,
unless he Is disloyal to her, and In South
Carolina tho nveuuest sort of a husband
Is presumed to be good enough for any
kind of a wife, for there Is no divorce
at'-all In that antiquated community.
Now,, undoubtedly It Is harrowing to a
wife's feelings, and It shatters love's
young dream for him to glvo her n black
eye. It Is haid enough, Heaven knows, on
the'' wbman who has a drunken on a
uhlftlcss husband, but none of these men,
faulty-though they be, hold the champion
ship medal for tho meanest husband.
Nor will woman when they come to
have, a hand In tho law maklpg, put
either Infidelity, or drunkenness, or
Physical brutalltj', or chronic laziness at
the head .of tho .list of .causes for divorce.
Tho man who occasionally strays off
the straight and narrow path Is often tho
most devoted and attentive and generous
husband at home. Ills sin Is of tho flesh
rather tharot tho spirit, and women un
derstand this so well that they can
overjook.lt In thousands of cases, and as
u matter of faqt, wjien a wlfe.rcfuses to
forgive infidelity It Is' generally not be
cause the man has otherwise qualified in
the mean husband' class. .
Also the marr. who drinks -too much
almoa't Invariably has' the redeeming
virtue of being sympathetic and tender
Mid Companionable; the ne'er-do-well is
generally eminently lovable, and even
the fists of ar bruto do not leave such
wounds and scars on a woman's body as
Faf Is Ridiculous
Overfat men and women, mortified and
humiliated by the publicity of comdIcu- ;
ous rolls and billows of fat, are gradually
learning that through the discovery of an
eminent physician the; burden of orerfat
ness is taken from them, leaving the fig
ure attractively proportioned, the flesh
firm,' tbttiBklh smooth, apd the genera)
health vastly improved,, without dieting",
exercise or resulting wrinkles or flabbl
ness. There Is no equal and no substitute
for the famoua Uannola Prescription, but
there is a new; and more convenient form
a tablet 'form of. this safe fat removr.
Marmola Prescription Tablets contain the
same harmless, effective ingredients as
the original prescription that has enabled
o many thousands of uncomfortable men
and women to reduce their weight evenly
and steadily et the rate of a pound or
more a dav. An exceptionally lance case
of these Marmola Prescription Tablets Is
sold bv all druggists at 75c or sent you
glrect by the Mormola Co., Farmer BMg,
jEFf WHY
He Gun v
the hurts that tho man who Is a spiritual
bully can leave on her soul.
. No, nono of these accepted types of
tho bad husband are entitled to be tho
hcadllners In the mean husband show.
The meanest husband on earth is the
petty tyrant of the hearthstone, the man
who takes advantage of his position to
browbeat and humiliate and insult his
wife, and to torture her by every refine
ment of cruelty through the long years
of their married lite.
You think there arc no such men?
Relieve me,' they aro plentiful,, and the
only reason there are not lynching bees
Jn which many a prominent citizen
would figure as the guest of honor Is,
because the thing a woman never tells
until she is on tho way to the divorce
court Is how her husband treats her
when the company Is gone and the doors
aro shut, and they two are alone to
gether. t
Do you never jjta to' a dinner lp .wlilcli.
the host's funiiles? story li to tell, with:
embellshments. of some mistake his
wife has made? Did you never watch tho
look of a bated rabbit come into such a
woman's face and observe how sho
looks suddenly down at the plate to
hide the tears In her eyes? That was a
glimpse, you got of tho meanest husband j
In the world': '
Do you.' know households where for
days at a time tho husband Bits up In
frozen silence, refusing to speak and
tell what is the matter, or how his
augustness has been offended, while ills
poor humble wife prostrates herself he
fore him and apologizes for things she
never did, and wears herself to a fraz
zle trying' to propltlato her lord and
master? Apd have you not felt, behold
ing him, that you came pretty near to
beholding a masterpiece of meanness?
Do you not know men whoso Insane
tempers keep their wives In cowering
fear men wh,d, If the slightest thing
goes wrong In 'the household, pour out
upon their wives such vituperation and
curses as none of their friends would
believe them capable of using In a
Woman's presence, to say nothing of
visiting upon their wives? How's that
for meanness? --
I know, women who H'e ,ln such deadly
fear of their husband's temper and ' in
sults that they never speak without first
canvassing' a subject In their own minds
to see If there is anything In it that
could possibly annoy their husbands, or
give them an opening for the cruel jibes
that they lie In wait to make against, the
woman or her family, or some" subject
dear to, her heart. I know of husbands
whose chief pleasure in life Is In stabbing
their wives to the quick by sarcasm, or
ridicule, and who take the same fiendish
delight In tormenting the women lp their
power that a savage takes in hacking
his victim to pieces.
And strange to-s'ay these men are nearly
always men who stand high among their
fellows, who are leaders In the 'church,
and probably celebrated for the geniality
and gallantry outside of the home, and
esteemed model husbands because they
provide their wives with a decont place
to live and good clothes,
Uut many a smug-faced hypocrite would
get the medal for tho meanest husband
It his wife would step forth and tell the
truth, and sav "this man knows I am
dependent upon hlpi, and he humiliates
me by Insulting me every time I ask
for a penny. No slave fearing the
master's labh, over quaked with terror
as I do when I prenent a bill to him.
There Is nothing that ho could say that
would wound me that he has left unsaid,
and In all the years I have been married
to him he has given me no tenderness,
no praise, - no recognition even of my
faithful service as wife and mother."
That's tho- meanest husband in the
world, the man who takes a woman's
llfo into his keeping and ruins It, the
man who could make his wife happy by
a kind and lovjng word, and who Is too
mean to say It. By the side of that,
robbing blind babies Is a noble and heroic
act.
The Australian Way.
The very hardest way to earn one's liv
ing is to serve on a van delivering C,hrist
mas presents, starting from the yartl at
a. m. to the tick, but with no fixed time
for finishing.
As a worn-out follower of this occupa
tion wearily crawled through the gatm
-.i the morn of Christmas eve, the lynx
eyed foreman dropped on him,
"6te here, futer, look m the clock
lou're fined sixpence for being late."
"Chuck It guv'nor, chuck It!" snarled
Petets feebly "I ain't knocked off from
Tlltt BEE: OMAHA , "WEDNESDAY, MARCH
of Reasoning
X'fA GQIN"
OOT HUNTING
j Tells Girl Reporter Why Women Writers Don't Wed
j 1
Can't Be Wife and Write, Too, Says Authoress
By LILIAN LAUJHltTV.
Interviews are frequently difficult to
secure. Thero are, however, somo clover
people who not only-permit themselves to
bo Interviewed, but even go ns far as to
Interview themselves.
A striking example of tho voluntarily
Interviewed Is Ocrtrude Athcrton, the
well-known author of "The Conqueror."
"Julia France and Her Times" and "Tho
Tower of Ivory." This woman knows
exactly for what she wishes to stand nmi.
therefore. Is perfectly sure of her ability
to stnnd. So In a recent series of ques
tions and answers which she substituted
for tho ordinary "speech," Mrs. Athcrton
sketched a vivid nijd living outline of her
attitude toward herself, and her times.
Every line of Mrs. Athcrton's figure Is
femininely curving; her trim tailored suit
n akes that qulto evident. A smart little
wuiged hat set utop her red gold hair
flaunts her Independence of spirit; for
that hat is set above the hair In normal
hat-fashion, whilst all tho rest of us pull
our chapeaux down about our ears, where
collars nrtd scarfs belong. .The , fresh
flvhite gloves and .trim boots complete a
picture of the eternal feminine. That Is
what you think, and then Mrs. Atherton
tells you what ho think.
"Twenty years ago, when I began to
arrivo," said Mrs. Atherton, "women
who wrote were interviewed and quoted
GETS HUMOR' FROM CURVED
MOUTHES OK OTHERS.
The White Plume of Navarre
ny REV. THOMAS B. GREGORY.
When Henry IV was crowned. 880
yennj wro, February 47, Jtoi, t)t ho.
Jewoled thlnu thut Unshod from his brow
added nothiuir to tho glory which ho had
already won undnr
the big white plume
that nodded abqve
his head at Coutras
and ivry.
A splendid "good
fellow," In every
sene of the word,
was Henry of Nav
arrethe most pop
ular monarch, prob
ably, that ever held
down a throne.
Though a dweller
among the shades
for three centuries,
Henry's personality
still lives, as real, as winsome, and as
lovable as when it shone through hie
eyes and animated his voice In the days
of the long ago.
Everybody loved Hehry, even his re
ligious and political enemies. His great
good nature, his fellow-feeling, his free
dom from cant, and vanity, and hypoc
risy, endeared him to all. It was Im
possible to meet lii in without realizing
that you stood In the pretence of a
real man, a thorough-going human be
ing, too sensible to be deceived by the
shows of things, or to have his head
Jurned by any jpf the "excellent fop
peries of the world."
Through the ''royal' blood, Henry was
as democratic In his ways as the hum
blest man In the nation, and even when
king he was ever ready to meet the
poorest of his subjects half way. He
carel nothing for ceremony He saw
right through the proud distinction?
HUNTING?
VJHfVT TtU
GOMNA HUNT
'
LITERARY TALEN.T NEED SOLITUDE
and misquoted as no one Is troubled to
dayexcept Rcbsovelt! Amelia, Rives nnd
I were driven frantic and out of the
country by our unenviable position as
geniuses or freaks or what you will.
Nowadays, women who write are so nu
merous that no'.bne will pay even enough
attention to them to remember their
names. Settle,,the question of whether
the literary Roman's position has im
proved a'JjcbrdlpgJ'io omt own lights!'"
"Does tho HteYatV woman marry?" was
asked.
"Not so long ns she can make a suc
cess of anything' else," was the cslm
reply.
"Quite seriously though, the literary
tempcnimont needs solltudo and han
nerves, I know I have thpm; a month
In the same house with 'Other people
drives mo to the edge of dlstrtctton. ff
you are a successful writer you are a
person of talent. Talent has to be fostered
by hard work. A writer who writes seri
ously refurnishes her brain after the
completion of each book, nnd after eight
or nine months of ench vear art4 rpent
i In the actual work of writing, the hardest
task yet remains: Go out into the world
meet people, be a society woman. And
there Is no tlmo left for the woman
writer to bo a wife."
In reply to a request to tell of her re
cent political experiences "stumping" for
Wilson In her native state, Callfornlo,
Mrs. Atherton smiled her whimsical little
urallo,
"They treated me charmingly except
In Los Angeles, when we spoke In an
enormous barn of a hall and there were
only 300 present."
The smile became a little chuckle. You
are scarcely prepared for Mr. Atherton'
"in lighter vein" way of taking herself
and her subject, from the serious, almost
scholarly, novel, she gives us with In
that had been built up between man
and man, and held them at their true
value, which was a very slim one.
His grand old Calvlnlstlc mother
one of the noblest pieces of wnman
hood, we aro told, that the world ever
saw had not taught her boy in vain,
for Henry lived and died a firm be
liever in the brotherhood of man and
In tho Justice and fair play that go
along with such belief.
There are blem'sjics upon Henry's
reign, blemishes uppu his career prior
to his Coronation, but most of them put
there not by himself, but by others.
Could he have hd his way he would
have shnd no blood, would have made
np widow orphan. His wars were all
fprced upon him by the logic of the
situation, At heart he loved peacit and
good will, and never did he manifest
uny of the signs of the despot, the
tyrant ir the cutthroat.
As king, or head administrator of his
Advice to the Lovelorn
Uy I1BATRICK KAIRKAX.
Ills Stunner. Arc Had,
Dear Miss Fairfax; I have been going
with a fellow for the last year, but we
had a few quarrels in the meantime,
Kvery tlmo I meet my friends ho never
tips his hat or takes notice of them. It
makes me feel emtiirrassed. I told him
several .times about it, but he didn't seem
to listen to me. PERPLKXK1).
Re assured 6f this: His conduct will
not improve after marriage.
Would you enjoy going through llfo
with a man whose rudtness Is a constant
embarrassment to you? I think not.
Ask Ilrr (lie Reason.
Drar Mls Fairfax: I im 19 and I have
been going with a .filrj lor. & jxar, ,&ail
5, 1913.
Drawn
YOU PopAUTYe
SASHNUGKiHT DONir
VoO KNOW TH61P-
( AIN'T No UONS
M TuRev ?
creasing power from year to ynur. Per
haps tho reason why many women hav.i
no sense of humor Is because their sham
Is absorbed by thoto of their sister,
whose comedv st'iit e I' is di veloped nt
all. I am sure that nt least half n dozen
liidlpu llf llilWII.rlll-vltic Ihi hnvtt rim.
j trlbuted to Mrs. Artherton's nimble wltil
"As a little example of how very
nicely they treated me, let mo tell you
that once my brother was almost put
out of a meeting I was addressing. Does
not that sound like proof of kindness to
n o. It was, though: for he snt at the
back of the hall and laughed uproariously
at my simple, unstudied gestures.
"I did my greatest political work, how
ever. In bringing the women of Han Fran
cisco out to tho polls. They showed tho
utmost Indifference to tho fact that they
must register. You see, California
women have n lazy rheller-from-llfu
tradition behind them.
"Tho mayor of our city got desperate
We had a talk. I called my sisters
names. The morning papers came out
with headlines: 'Mrs. Atherton calls tho
women who have not registered "Oy
stcrBl'' '
"Ten thousand of them came out of
their Bhclls at once. Ono of my friends
reproached, mo because her cook de
manded nil hour off that very day. She
told my Irate friend: 'Indiuie, I'll prove
I'm no "Oyster."' "
CALLS WOMEN IN CALIFORNIA
"OYSTERS."
nation, he ovluued extraordinary abil
ity. He clearly belonged In the front
rank of statesmen. Under his rule
Franco began to see hur first real pros,
perlty. He put new life Into the fi
nances, he reformed agriculture, ho
revolutionized commerce uud manufac
tures. More than all, he Infused Into official
dom the Idea that tho state meant the
people, and that It nus the boundeu
du(y of officialdom to run things In
the interest of tho people, and the
whole people. When the villainous
Ravalllac ran his daggsr Into Henry's
heart he struck the niuu who reckoned
among his proudest achievements tint
fact that ho had made It passible for
tlve "poorest Frenchman to have a
fowl In tho pot."
Uedevllltd by tho theologians and ,be
set an all sides by the self-seeking poli
ticians, Henry muimK.d, never! Mens,
to keep the ship of Btato heailud In
the right direction, and but for his as
sasslnutlon he might have forestalled the
work of Rlnhelleu and Louis XIV.. and
thus made unnecessary tho bloody work1
of the French revolution.
every time I usk her she has some other
place to go. ALFRUU.
There is no discouragement for you in
lier refusal. Perhaps her parents object;
perhaps she thjuks you are too young to
pay a girl serious attentions. Ask her
her reasons, anu respect them. That win
be a good beginning In winning her re
gard, Trll Hep Often.
Dear Miss Fairfax; I am 17 years of
age, and 1 am keeping company with a
young lady. I love her vuy dearly.
Whenever 1 want to take her out she re
fuses. Can you tell me how to convince
her of my love? V. O.
There Is only one way: Declaring It
often and giving proof by unwaverlnf
devotion.
Rut you are only 17. Would It not mean
more to your future If you put off that
declaration to any girl until you have
raachMl mail's estataT
age
for The Bee by
IT nd yoo
KNOW IT, BUT
THS WQN
DON'T MMOVsl IT
When Man Falls Below Animal Standards
Uy KLLA WHKKLKR WILCOX.
(Copyright, 1913. tuy Star Company.)
A beautiful young woman (speaking
physically) Is divorced from her husband,
Hiid with a comfortable alimony goes o
Europo to enjoy herself.
Thero she meets a popular bachelor,
and ho establishes
her In apartments
In Paris, nnd Is
soon everywhere
with her. She Is
greatly admired for
her beautnnd cos
tumes. And sho Is
much In love with
her companion.
Then comes tho
usual ending; a
vulgar quarrel, loud
voices blows and
pistol Hhots,
This time no ono
Is killed, tho man
Is wounded and the
woman disappears,
and report says she, too, was wounded.
Still another has It that sho was kicked
ami .beaten by ncr protector.
It docs' not matter about the details.
1 Tho fact Is tho main thing to consider.
And tills fact Is, that when two peo
ple undertako to find, happlpess by es
tablishing lawn unto themselves, and by
defying nil moral and legal codes, the
"romanco' Invariably ends with a tra
gedy. Some times ono Is killed; sometimes
both; sometimes both live, but always
Is thero quarreling, discord, Jealously,
disillusionment uud Bcpuratlom Apd al
ways misery and suffering.
This Is not difficult to ;undcrstapdv
No man really loves a woman who en
ters Into a questionable relationship with
him.
Ho Is governed wholly by, animal pas
sion. All created beings, from liisccts up to
men, possess this animal sex Instinct.
'That Is the wuy tho universe keeps
going.
Tho lesser animals use this Impulse
wholly for the reproduction of their
spocles, and the man, being ondowed with
reason, understanding of hlffher laws,
refltferhent, self control,- b expected to
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1)
"Bud" Fisher
i. ,
corYrner ioj iy &r to
Imbue his natural animal impulses with
nil these, attributes.
When he does, then the relation of
sexes becomes a sacrament. When he
falls to do this, ho Invariably falls
much below, tho animal standards, and
bncomea an offense to society, to. his
fellow .creatures, to men and angels.
Tho animal knows and obeys his
own limitations.
Tho man beast uses stimulants,
highly spiced foods and drugs to ac
centuate his boastfulness and when all
these things fall, and the woman he
has purchased for his pleasure no
longer appeals to his sated appetite,
blowH, shots nnd abusive words' take
the plnco of endearing expressions.
The unsophisticated girl who la the
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she must know that he feels only the
baseet kind of physical passion, and
that this will die out and change to
Indifference, disgust or repulsion aa
surely as the appetite of a gourmand
becomes sated with over-fn-Sulgenc.
To be flaunted before the eyes of a
reckless world of ajeasure-lovlng men
and women for a brief hour, to wear
expensive Jewels and fashionable cos.
tumes, to be gazed at as a beauty nd
the favorite of siioh a man, for a
'season," is poor pay for the certain
sound of discord, auarrels, biting
'words and stlnglnfr blows which oft
times reach the death mark,
No attraction, between the sexes
can lost or produce happiness which
Is not based on true friendship, high
respect, mutual self-control and un
selfish love. ,
' These are the. four cornerstones on
which sex passion must build Its man
sion, it It Is to last
Without these cornerstone no mar
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